Tangled

Time Out says

3 out of 5 stars

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Users say

Time Out says

3 out of 5 stars

An independent-minded heroine (Moore) longing to experience the outside world; a dashingly handsome male counterpart (Levi) in need of companionship; some humdrum Alan Menken--penned musical numbers. Welcome to 1989! The House of Mouse's retelling of the Rapunzel fairy tale might as well be titled Little Mermaid Redux---a transparent attempt to fill the Disney coffers by repackaging the masses-pleasing formulas that led to the studio's early-'90s resurgence. A few things have changed, from a heavy reliance on CG that makes every character look frighteningly plastic to an occasional fallback on Dreamworks-style self-awareness (Levi's Flynn Ryder narrates the story oh-so-knowingly). But almost everything else remains the same, and the familiarity breeds equal levels admiration and contempt.

Credit neo-Katzenberg executive producer John Lasseter for porting over his Pixar-honed talent for snappy narrative and memorable imagery. Rapunzel's flowing golden locks---which bestow eternal youth on the show-tune-belting villain (Murphy) who kidnapped the lass as a baby---are thrown around like Tarzan's vines, allowing for several delirious flights of fancy. The animal sidekicks (horse Maximus and chameleon Pascal) are adorable and action-figure ready, and there's an especially wonderful sequence where thousands of floating lanterns light up the night sky. Disney knows how to bewitch a crowd, but the sense that Tangled was made more by corporate mandate than artistic spark remains constant throughout. There's something particularly synthetic about Rapunzel's burgeoning defiance---you never feel like you're watching a girl on the empowering cusp of adulthood so much as a selection of attitudes compiled through demographic study. Talk about your Grimm contrivances.